This book attempts to bridge the enormous gap between introductory quantum mechanics and the research front of modern optics and scientific fields that make use of light in one step. Hence, while it ...
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This book attempts to bridge the enormous gap between introductory quantum mechanics and the research front of modern optics and scientific fields that make use of light in one step. Hence, while it is suitable as a reference for the specialist in quantum optics, it also targets the nonspecialists from other disciplines who need to understand light and its uses in research. With a unique approach it introduces a single analytic tool, namely the density matrix, to analyze complex optical phenomena encountered in traditional as well as cross‐disciplinary research. It moves swiftly in a tight sequence from elementary to sophisticated topics in quantum optics, including laser tweezers, laser cooling, coherent population transfer, optical magnetism, electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), squeezed light, and cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED). A systematic approach is used that starts with the simplest systems – stationary two‐level atoms – then introduces atomic motion, adds more energy levels, and moves on to discuss first‐, second‐, and third‐order coherence effects that are the basis for analyzing new optical phenomena in incompletely characterized systems. Unconventional examples and original problems are used to engage even seasoned researchers in exploring a mathematical methodology with which they can tackle virtually any new problem involving light. An extensive bibliography makes connections with mathematical techniques and subject areas which can extend the benefit of each section to guide readers further. The steady progression from “simple” to “elaborate” makes the book accessible not only to students from traditional subject areas that make use of light (physics, chemistry, electrical engineering, and materials science), but also to researchers from the “hyphenated” subjects of modern science and engineering: the biophysicists using mechanical effects of light, photochemists developing coherent control for rare species detection, biomedical engineers imaging through scattering media, electromechanical engineers working on molecular design of materials for electronics and space, electrical and computer engineers developing schemes for quantum computation, cryptography, frequency references, and so on. To try to identify techniques and ideas that are universal enough to be applied across the bewildering landscape of research on intersecting boundaries of emerging modern disciplines is a great challenge of out time. “Lectures on Light” offers selected insights on quantum dynamics and quantum theory of light for exactly this purpose.Less

Lectures on Light : Nonlinear and Quantum Optics using the Density Matrix

Stephen Rand

Published in print: 2010-05-26

This book attempts to bridge the enormous gap between introductory quantum mechanics and the research front of modern optics and scientific fields that make use of light in one step. Hence, while it is suitable as a reference for the specialist in quantum optics, it also targets the nonspecialists from other disciplines who need to understand light and its uses in research. With a unique approach it introduces a single analytic tool, namely the density matrix, to analyze complex optical phenomena encountered in traditional as well as cross‐disciplinary research. It moves swiftly in a tight sequence from elementary to sophisticated topics in quantum optics, including laser tweezers, laser cooling, coherent population transfer, optical magnetism, electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), squeezed light, and cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED). A systematic approach is used that starts with the simplest systems – stationary two‐level atoms – then introduces atomic motion, adds more energy levels, and moves on to discuss first‐, second‐, and third‐order coherence effects that are the basis for analyzing new optical phenomena in incompletely characterized systems. Unconventional examples and original problems are used to engage even seasoned researchers in exploring a mathematical methodology with which they can tackle virtually any new problem involving light. An extensive bibliography makes connections with mathematical techniques and subject areas which can extend the benefit of each section to guide readers further. The steady progression from “simple” to “elaborate” makes the book accessible not only to students from traditional subject areas that make use of light (physics, chemistry, electrical engineering, and materials science), but also to researchers from the “hyphenated” subjects of modern science and engineering: the biophysicists using mechanical effects of light, photochemists developing coherent control for rare species detection, biomedical engineers imaging through scattering media, electromechanical engineers working on molecular design of materials for electronics and space, electrical and computer engineers developing schemes for quantum computation, cryptography, frequency references, and so on. To try to identify techniques and ideas that are universal enough to be applied across the bewildering landscape of research on intersecting boundaries of emerging modern disciplines is a great challenge of out time. “Lectures on Light” offers selected insights on quantum dynamics and quantum theory of light for exactly this purpose.

This chapter formulates the Hartree-Fock approximation with density matrices, and discusses the properties of the Hartree-Fock equations together with the energy functional for the ground state ...
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This chapter formulates the Hartree-Fock approximation with density matrices, and discusses the properties of the Hartree-Fock equations together with the energy functional for the ground state energy. A generalization to finite thermal excitations is performed by applying the variational principle to the grand canonical ensemble. Finally, the equations for time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) are described both at zero and at finite temperature.Less

The Hartree–Fock approximation

Helmut Hofmann

Published in print: 2008-04-17

This chapter formulates the Hartree-Fock approximation with density matrices, and discusses the properties of the Hartree-Fock equations together with the energy functional for the ground state energy. A generalization to finite thermal excitations is performed by applying the variational principle to the grand canonical ensemble. Finally, the equations for time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) are described both at zero and at finite temperature.

This chapter provides an account of atomic resonance fluorescence and its depolarization by external magnetic fields, also known as the Hanle effect. Experiments in mercury vapour and their ...
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This chapter provides an account of atomic resonance fluorescence and its depolarization by external magnetic fields, also known as the Hanle effect. Experiments in mercury vapour and their theoretical description are explained both by classical and quantum mechanical density matrix methods. Radiative lifetimes of alkali atoms and Group IIB atoms are reported. Optical and radio-frequency coherence, and experiments using pulsed and intensity modulated radiation are discussed.Less

The Hanle effect and the theory of resonance fluorescence experiments

Alan Corney

Published in print: 2006-10-05

This chapter provides an account of atomic resonance fluorescence and its depolarization by external magnetic fields, also known as the Hanle effect. Experiments in mercury vapour and their theoretical description are explained both by classical and quantum mechanical density matrix methods. Radiative lifetimes of alkali atoms and Group IIB atoms are reported. Optical and radio-frequency coherence, and experiments using pulsed and intensity modulated radiation are discussed.

This chapter develops the fundamental notions and concepts of the probabilistic and statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics. It begins with a brief review of the mathematical structure given ...
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This chapter develops the fundamental notions and concepts of the probabilistic and statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics. It begins with a brief review of the mathematical structure given by a Hilbert space of state vectors and an algebra of observables represented by selfadjoint operators. Special emphasis is laid on the connection between the spectral representation of a selfadjoint operator and a corresponding random variable that describes the possible measurement outcomes. The chapter further introduces the concepts of a composite quantum system, of the reduced density matrix, and of entangled quantum states. A section on quantum entropies is included, as well as the mathematical formulation of the generalized theory of quantum measurements in terms of completely positive quantum operations and effects.Less

Quantum Probability

Heinz-Peter BreuerFrancesco Petruccione

Published in print: 2007-01-25

This chapter develops the fundamental notions and concepts of the probabilistic and statistical interpretation of quantum mechanics. It begins with a brief review of the mathematical structure given by a Hilbert space of state vectors and an algebra of observables represented by selfadjoint operators. Special emphasis is laid on the connection between the spectral representation of a selfadjoint operator and a corresponding random variable that describes the possible measurement outcomes. The chapter further introduces the concepts of a composite quantum system, of the reduced density matrix, and of entangled quantum states. A section on quantum entropies is included, as well as the mathematical formulation of the generalized theory of quantum measurements in terms of completely positive quantum operations and effects.

This chapter characterizes the statistical properties of a quantum mechanical ensemble in terms of a density matrix. However, if selective measurements of one or several observables are carried out ...
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This chapter characterizes the statistical properties of a quantum mechanical ensemble in terms of a density matrix. However, if selective measurements of one or several observables are carried out on the ensemble, it will split into a number of sub-ensembles, each sub-ensemble being conditioned on a particular outcome of the measurements. The mathematical description of the collection of sub-ensembles thus created leads to probability distributions on projective Hilbert space. The chapter develops an appropriate mathematical framework which enables the general formulation of such a distribution, and leads to the concepts of stochastic state vectors and stochastic density matrices. These concepts are required in later chapters to construct appropriate stochastic differential equations describing the continuous monitoring of open quantum systems.Less

Probability Distributions on Hilbert Space

Heinz-Peter BreuerFrancesco Petruccione

Published in print: 2007-01-25

This chapter characterizes the statistical properties of a quantum mechanical ensemble in terms of a density matrix. However, if selective measurements of one or several observables are carried out on the ensemble, it will split into a number of sub-ensembles, each sub-ensemble being conditioned on a particular outcome of the measurements. The mathematical description of the collection of sub-ensembles thus created leads to probability distributions on projective Hilbert space. The chapter develops an appropriate mathematical framework which enables the general formulation of such a distribution, and leads to the concepts of stochastic state vectors and stochastic density matrices. These concepts are required in later chapters to construct appropriate stochastic differential equations describing the continuous monitoring of open quantum systems.

This chapter explains the excitation of atoms by polarized resonance radiation and their interaction with static and radio-frequency fields, known as optical double-resonance. The Brossel-Bitter ...
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This chapter explains the excitation of atoms by polarized resonance radiation and their interaction with static and radio-frequency fields, known as optical double-resonance. The Brossel-Bitter experiment on mercury vapour is discussed and classical and quantum mechanical theories of the effect are developed. The phenomena of radiation trapping and coherence narrowing are explained, and the effect of collision broadening is examined. Experiments involving intensity-modulated light are reported, and the density matrix formulation of optical double-resonance experiments is developed.Less

Optical double resonance experiments

Alan Corney

Published in print: 2006-10-05

This chapter explains the excitation of atoms by polarized resonance radiation and their interaction with static and radio-frequency fields, known as optical double-resonance. The Brossel-Bitter experiment on mercury vapour is discussed and classical and quantum mechanical theories of the effect are developed. The phenomena of radiation trapping and coherence narrowing are explained, and the effect of collision broadening is examined. Experiments involving intensity-modulated light are reported, and the density matrix formulation of optical double-resonance experiments is developed.

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) exploits the interaction of nuclei with magnetic fields. A strong static field is applied to polarise the nuclear magnetic moments, time-dependent magnetic radio ...
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Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) exploits the interaction of nuclei with magnetic fields. A strong static field is applied to polarise the nuclear magnetic moments, time-dependent magnetic radio frequency fields are used to stimulate the spectroscopic response, and magnetic-field gradients are needed to obtain spatial resolution. Following the description of the different magnetic fields used in NMR spectroscopy and imaging, the behaviour of magnetic nuclei exposed to these fields is treated first in terms of the classic vector model, and then the density-matrix concept is introduced. The latter is required to describe the couplings among nuclei, for example, the dipole-dipole interaction which dominates the 1H NMR spectrum of most solid materials. In addition, knowledge of the density matrix is helpful to understand multi-quantum coherences as well as the imaging methods developed for investigations of solid materials.Less

Fundamentals

Bernhard Blümich

Published in print: 2003-01-23

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) exploits the interaction of nuclei with magnetic fields. A strong static field is applied to polarise the nuclear magnetic moments, time-dependent magnetic radio frequency fields are used to stimulate the spectroscopic response, and magnetic-field gradients are needed to obtain spatial resolution. Following the description of the different magnetic fields used in NMR spectroscopy and imaging, the behaviour of magnetic nuclei exposed to these fields is treated first in terms of the classic vector model, and then the density-matrix concept is introduced. The latter is required to describe the couplings among nuclei, for example, the dipole-dipole interaction which dominates the 1H NMR spectrum of most solid materials. In addition, knowledge of the density matrix is helpful to understand multi-quantum coherences as well as the imaging methods developed for investigations of solid materials.

Chapter 6 begins by transforming the optical wave itself into a quantized form, and the full implications of the wave‐particle duality of Chapter 2 become clear. The electric field may be pictured as ...
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Chapter 6 begins by transforming the optical wave itself into a quantized form, and the full implications of the wave‐particle duality of Chapter 2 become clear. The electric field may be pictured as an infinite ladder of discrete states and this structure allows optical interactions to be described photon by photon. The origin of spontaneous emission emerges from this treatment as a transition process that is stimulated by electric field fluctuations of the vacuum, and Weisskopf–Wigner theory explains why it is irreversible. The subject of coherent states is introduced and intriguing possibilities outlined regarding the noise properties of components of these states that form different quadratures in terms of the optical phase. Next, statistical analysis of light fields is considered to serve as a basis for more quantitative comparisons of fields and their noise properties. Methods of calculating the first and second degrees of coherence are presented, and the ranges of values corresponding to “classical” versus “quantum” light sources are discussed. The reduced density matrix is developed to justify analysis that focuses on only certain aspects of optical dynamics while ignoring others, as an important tool for simplifying complex problems. Finally, in view of its historical importance, the problem of calculating the fluorescence spectrum of resonantly excited two‐level atoms is considered using both a method of moments and dressed atom theory.Less

Quantized Fields and Coherent States

Stephen C. Rand

Published in print: 2010-05-26

Chapter 6 begins by transforming the optical wave itself into a quantized form, and the full implications of the wave‐particle duality of Chapter 2 become clear. The electric field may be pictured as an infinite ladder of discrete states and this structure allows optical interactions to be described photon by photon. The origin of spontaneous emission emerges from this treatment as a transition process that is stimulated by electric field fluctuations of the vacuum, and Weisskopf–Wigner theory explains why it is irreversible. The subject of coherent states is introduced and intriguing possibilities outlined regarding the noise properties of components of these states that form different quadratures in terms of the optical phase. Next, statistical analysis of light fields is considered to serve as a basis for more quantitative comparisons of fields and their noise properties. Methods of calculating the first and second degrees of coherence are presented, and the ranges of values corresponding to “classical” versus “quantum” light sources are discussed. The reduced density matrix is developed to justify analysis that focuses on only certain aspects of optical dynamics while ignoring others, as an important tool for simplifying complex problems. Finally, in view of its historical importance, the problem of calculating the fluorescence spectrum of resonantly excited two‐level atoms is considered using both a method of moments and dressed atom theory.

This chapter focuses on coherence and decoherence, starting from the basis of quantum mechanics and including the classical paradox of Schrödinger’s cat and entanglement. Decoherence and relaxation ...
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This chapter focuses on coherence and decoherence, starting from the basis of quantum mechanics and including the classical paradox of Schrödinger’s cat and entanglement. Decoherence and relaxation are simultaneously accounted for by an evolution equation for the density matrix, which is analysed in the case of spin tunnelling and simplifies when decoherence is complete. The final section discusses the possible exploitation of coherence in quantum computing.Less

COHERENCE AND DECOHERENCE

Dante GatteschiRoberta SessoliJacques Villain

Published in print: 2006-03-02

This chapter focuses on coherence and decoherence, starting from the basis of quantum mechanics and including the classical paradox of Schrödinger’s cat and entanglement. Decoherence and relaxation are simultaneously accounted for by an evolution equation for the density matrix, which is analysed in the case of spin tunnelling and simplifies when decoherence is complete. The final section discusses the possible exploitation of coherence in quantum computing.

This chapter reminds, without entering into details, the main mathematical concepts and results relevant for finite system quantum mechanics. The basic postulates single out a Hilbert space of wave ...
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This chapter reminds, without entering into details, the main mathematical concepts and results relevant for finite system quantum mechanics. The basic postulates single out a Hilbert space of wave functions with self-adjoint linear operators corresponding to observables as was originally discovered by von Neumann. The chapter connects the contemporary terminology of linear Hilbert space operators with quantum physics. Important concepts like linear operators, measures, self-adjointness, spectral measures, density matrices, and tensor products are discussed and illustrated in the light of observables, probability for quantum systems and composite systems. A first example of a useful algebra of observables, the Weyl algebra, is described in detail and linked to the classical phase space of a point particle.Less

Basic Tools For Quantum Mechanics

Robert AlickiMark Fannes

Published in print: 2001-07-12

This chapter reminds, without entering into details, the main mathematical concepts and results relevant for finite system quantum mechanics. The basic postulates single out a Hilbert space of wave functions with self-adjoint linear operators corresponding to observables as was originally discovered by von Neumann. The chapter connects the contemporary terminology of linear Hilbert space operators with quantum physics. Important concepts like linear operators, measures, self-adjointness, spectral measures, density matrices, and tensor products are discussed and illustrated in the light of observables, probability for quantum systems and composite systems. A first example of a useful algebra of observables, the Weyl algebra, is described in detail and linked to the classical phase space of a point particle.

This chapter outlines the quantum ideas that underpin magnetic resonance and explains their link to classical physics. It discusses some of the essential concepts governing the quantum behaviour of ...
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This chapter outlines the quantum ideas that underpin magnetic resonance and explains their link to classical physics. It discusses some of the essential concepts governing the quantum behaviour of ensembles of nuclear spins, including the nature of quantum states, the eigenvalue equation and observables, the measurement process, dynamics, and the Schroedinger equation. A detailed description of angular momentum is given along with discussion of the role of symmetry, rotation operators, and both product and total angular momentum representations. Statistical ensembles of spins are introduced and the density matrix and Liouville formalism outlined, along with the various tensor bases for the description of spin systems, both independent and coupled. The spin Hamiltonian is described in detail and the evolution of spin systems under various Hamiltonian terms is discussed using the density matrix description, along with suitable recession diagrams.Less

Quantum description of nuclear ensembles

Paul T. Callaghan

Published in print: 2011-09-15

This chapter outlines the quantum ideas that underpin magnetic resonance and explains their link to classical physics. It discusses some of the essential concepts governing the quantum behaviour of ensembles of nuclear spins, including the nature of quantum states, the eigenvalue equation and observables, the measurement process, dynamics, and the Schroedinger equation. A detailed description of angular momentum is given along with discussion of the role of symmetry, rotation operators, and both product and total angular momentum representations. Statistical ensembles of spins are introduced and the density matrix and Liouville formalism outlined, along with the various tensor bases for the description of spin systems, both independent and coupled. The spin Hamiltonian is described in detail and the evolution of spin systems under various Hamiltonian terms is discussed using the density matrix description, along with suitable recession diagrams.

This chapter applies the theoretical tolls developed in Chapter 3 to macroscopic systems in thermal equilibrium, wherein the Gibbs variational principle is understood as defining the equilibrium ...
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This chapter applies the theoretical tolls developed in Chapter 3 to macroscopic systems in thermal equilibrium, wherein the Gibbs variational principle is understood as defining the equilibrium state.Less

Equilibrium Statistical Mechanics and Thermodynamics

T. Grandy Walter

Published in print: 2008-06-26

This chapter applies the theoretical tolls developed in Chapter 3 to macroscopic systems in thermal equilibrium, wherein the Gibbs variational principle is understood as defining the equilibrium state.

This chapter analyses time evolution in macroscopic systems, and critiques the standard equation of motion for the density matrix. The practical difference between microscopic and macroscopic ...
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This chapter analyses time evolution in macroscopic systems, and critiques the standard equation of motion for the density matrix. The practical difference between microscopic and macroscopic equations of motion and the necessary relation to external sources is recognized explicitly.Less

Sources and Time-Dependent Processes

T. Grandy Walter

Published in print: 2008-06-26

This chapter analyses time evolution in macroscopic systems, and critiques the standard equation of motion for the density matrix. The practical difference between microscopic and macroscopic equations of motion and the necessary relation to external sources is recognized explicitly.

This chapter provides a detailed description of the numerical algorithms used to study open and closed quantum systems out of equilibrium. In a first step, the physical formulas to be evaluated ...
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This chapter provides a detailed description of the numerical algorithms used to study open and closed quantum systems out of equilibrium. In a first step, the physical formulas to be evaluated numerically, and the mathematical framework for all these problems, are established. Quasi-exact simulations in the full Hilbert space for relatively small system sizes are discussed. Next, it is shown that in some cases it is possible to abandon the costly treatment of the full Hilbert space while identifying subspaces that can be handled numerically and still contain all of the essential physics. Related algorithms, which are essentially effective in one spatial dimension, are discussed under the heading of “matrix product state (MPS) simulations” (or “density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG) simulations”). It is shown that this strategy works very well on short timescales, but encounters fundamental issues of quantum physics as time evolves.Less

Ulrich Schollwöck

Published in print: 2016-06-23

This chapter provides a detailed description of the numerical algorithms used to study open and closed quantum systems out of equilibrium. In a first step, the physical formulas to be evaluated numerically, and the mathematical framework for all these problems, are established. Quasi-exact simulations in the full Hilbert space for relatively small system sizes are discussed. Next, it is shown that in some cases it is possible to abandon the costly treatment of the full Hilbert space while identifying subspaces that can be handled numerically and still contain all of the essential physics. Related algorithms, which are essentially effective in one spatial dimension, are discussed under the heading of “matrix product state (MPS) simulations” (or “density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG) simulations”). It is shown that this strategy works very well on short timescales, but encounters fundamental issues of quantum physics as time evolves.

This chapter presents the basic elements of quantum theory, including the Dirac bra and ket notation for quantum states, Hermitian operators and their eigenstates, commutators and the Schrödinger and ...
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This chapter presents the basic elements of quantum theory, including the Dirac bra and ket notation for quantum states, Hermitian operators and their eigenstates, commutators and the Schrödinger and Heisenberg equations of motion. Simple model atoms are described as an effective spin and their properties related to the familiar Pauli spin-half operators. The density matrix is introduced to describe incoherent processes. The electric-dipole coupling between and atom and the electromagnetic field is treated leading to coupled equations for the probability amplitudes. Finally, quantized field modes are introduced and their elementary properties described leading to the fundamental Jaynes–Cummings model of a single two-state atom interacting with a quantized field mode.Less

Foundations

STEPHEN M. BARNETTPAUL M. RADMORE

Published in print: 2002-11-14

This chapter presents the basic elements of quantum theory, including the Dirac bra and ket notation for quantum states, Hermitian operators and their eigenstates, commutators and the Schrödinger and Heisenberg equations of motion. Simple model atoms are described as an effective spin and their properties related to the familiar Pauli spin-half operators. The density matrix is introduced to describe incoherent processes. The electric-dipole coupling between and atom and the electromagnetic field is treated leading to coupled equations for the probability amplitudes. Finally, quantized field modes are introduced and their elementary properties described leading to the fundamental Jaynes–Cummings model of a single two-state atom interacting with a quantized field mode.

This chapter introduces quantum spin chains for two different purposes: prototypes of infinite quantum systems discretized in space, and general models of stochastic processes in discrete time on a ...
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This chapter introduces quantum spin chains for two different purposes: prototypes of infinite quantum systems discretized in space, and general models of stochastic processes in discrete time on a discrete quantum state space. The algebra of local observables is constructed. The probability functionals, i.e. the states, are defined in terms of reduced density matrices with their compatibility relations. Several examples of shift-invariant states are discussed: product states, classical states, and limiting Gibbs states. The chapter concludes with the construction of nearest-neighbour dynamics and the need for an appropriate algebra of quasi-local observables.Less

Spin Chains

Robert AlickiMark Fannes

Published in print: 2001-07-12

This chapter introduces quantum spin chains for two different purposes: prototypes of infinite quantum systems discretized in space, and general models of stochastic processes in discrete time on a discrete quantum state space. The algebra of local observables is constructed. The probability functionals, i.e. the states, are defined in terms of reduced density matrices with their compatibility relations. Several examples of shift-invariant states are discussed: product states, classical states, and limiting Gibbs states. The chapter concludes with the construction of nearest-neighbour dynamics and the need for an appropriate algebra of quasi-local observables.

Unlike other optoelectronic devices, quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) cannot be described by simple drift-diffusion equation. Whereas in interband semiconductor lasers the assumption of separate ...
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Unlike other optoelectronic devices, quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) cannot be described by simple drift-diffusion equation. Whereas in interband semiconductor lasers the assumption of separate quasi-Fermi levels in the conduction and valence bands allows the transport problem to be reduced to a quasi-equilibrium situation, such approximations completely break down in QCLs. Because of the subpicosecond long intersubband lifetime, the transport scattering time is never much shorter than the intersubband transition time, preventing the use of such approximation. For this reason, the development of predictive transport models requires a more sophisticated approach. This chapter discusses rate equation models, density matrix, full density matrix models, Monte-Carlo techniques, and non-equilibrium Green's function.Less

Transport models

Jérôme Faist

Published in print: 2013-03-14

Unlike other optoelectronic devices, quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) cannot be described by simple drift-diffusion equation. Whereas in interband semiconductor lasers the assumption of separate quasi-Fermi levels in the conduction and valence bands allows the transport problem to be reduced to a quasi-equilibrium situation, such approximations completely break down in QCLs. Because of the subpicosecond long intersubband lifetime, the transport scattering time is never much shorter than the intersubband transition time, preventing the use of such approximation. For this reason, the development of predictive transport models requires a more sophisticated approach. This chapter discusses rate equation models, density matrix, full density matrix models, Monte-Carlo techniques, and non-equilibrium Green's function.

Chapter 3 discusses the interaction Hamiltonian, which determines the way that light interacts with matter. Simple perturbative analysis is applied to see if basic dynamics of atoms can be explained. ...
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Chapter 3 discusses the interaction Hamiltonian, which determines the way that light interacts with matter. Simple perturbative analysis is applied to see if basic dynamics of atoms can be explained. The partial successes of perturbation theory are compared with predictions of an “exact” method of calculating the occupation probabilities of various atomic states. The “exact” method is shown to fail, establishing the need for improved approaches that yield correct results in later chapters. The density matrix is introduced as a tool for describing not only the populations of atomic energy levels but also the coherence that can be created and lost during the dynamic evolution of atoms in time. A vector model based on the Bloch vector is presented as a useful way of picturing coherent atom–field interactions in an optical “spin” space, which proves to be particularly useful in understanding multiple-pulse interactions. Mechanisms are described that cause line broadening in optical spectroscopy, such as the Doppler effect. In preparation for the extensive use in later chapters of models based on only two or three energy levels, it is also shown that multi-level real atoms can experimentally be converted into two-level systems for strict comparisons with theory.Less

Atom–Field Interactions

Stephen C. Rand

Published in print: 2016-06-09

Chapter 3 discusses the interaction Hamiltonian, which determines the way that light interacts with matter. Simple perturbative analysis is applied to see if basic dynamics of atoms can be explained. The partial successes of perturbation theory are compared with predictions of an “exact” method of calculating the occupation probabilities of various atomic states. The “exact” method is shown to fail, establishing the need for improved approaches that yield correct results in later chapters. The density matrix is introduced as a tool for describing not only the populations of atomic energy levels but also the coherence that can be created and lost during the dynamic evolution of atoms in time. A vector model based on the Bloch vector is presented as a useful way of picturing coherent atom–field interactions in an optical “spin” space, which proves to be particularly useful in understanding multiple-pulse interactions. Mechanisms are described that cause line broadening in optical spectroscopy, such as the Doppler effect. In preparation for the extensive use in later chapters of models based on only two or three energy levels, it is also shown that multi-level real atoms can experimentally be converted into two-level systems for strict comparisons with theory.

The three main issues in the foundations of quantum theory are measurement, non‐locality, and identical particles (quantum statistics). All of these pertain to the relations between different parts ...
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The three main issues in the foundations of quantum theory are measurement, non‐locality, and identical particles (quantum statistics). All of these pertain to the relations between different parts of a composite system. Hence this chapter covers tensor products, reduction of the density matrix (reduced states), and certain aspects of Hugh Everett's relative state formalism. This is then utilized in an extended discussion of measurement as a quantum‐mechanical process.Less

Composite Systems, Interaction, and Measurement

Bas C. van Fraassen

Published in print: 1991-09-26

The three main issues in the foundations of quantum theory are measurement, non‐locality, and identical particles (quantum statistics). All of these pertain to the relations between different parts of a composite system. Hence this chapter covers tensor products, reduction of the density matrix (reduced states), and certain aspects of Hugh Everett's relative state formalism. This is then utilized in an extended discussion of measurement as a quantum‐mechanical process.

Nonlinear susceptibilities of optical media are the key parameters to describe various nonlinear optical effects and phenomena within the framework of semiclassical theory. In this chapter, explicit ...
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Nonlinear susceptibilities of optical media are the key parameters to describe various nonlinear optical effects and phenomena within the framework of semiclassical theory. In this chapter, explicit expressions of various orders of nonlinear susceptibilities are derived in the approximation of electric-dipole moment by using the density matrix method. The basic properties of nonlinear susceptibilities are discussed in detail, including their symmetry properties, local-field correction, and resonance enhancement. Strictly speaking, the formulations of various orders of susceptibilities described here are applicable only to those cases where (i) the electron-cloud distortion and the intramolecular motion are the major sources of the nonlinear polarization of the medium, and (ii) the nonlinear polarization response of the medium is instantaneous and localized with respect to the applied optical field.Less

Detailed Theory of Nonlinear Susceptibilities

Guang S. He

Published in print: 2014-10-30

Nonlinear susceptibilities of optical media are the key parameters to describe various nonlinear optical effects and phenomena within the framework of semiclassical theory. In this chapter, explicit expressions of various orders of nonlinear susceptibilities are derived in the approximation of electric-dipole moment by using the density matrix method. The basic properties of nonlinear susceptibilities are discussed in detail, including their symmetry properties, local-field correction, and resonance enhancement. Strictly speaking, the formulations of various orders of susceptibilities described here are applicable only to those cases where (i) the electron-cloud distortion and the intramolecular motion are the major sources of the nonlinear polarization of the medium, and (ii) the nonlinear polarization response of the medium is instantaneous and localized with respect to the applied optical field.